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- Bomb-laden drone from Yemen rebels targets Saudi airport
- Researchers say a tiny planet slammed into the Moon a long time ago
- New Feature on 2020 Chevrolet and GMC Models Won't Let Car Move Till Driver Fastens Seatbelt
- HUD Secretary Ben Carson stumped during congressional hearing
- Don't Just Vacation in Any Old Airbnb When You Can Choose One on Wheels
- Latest Sign of Beto O’Rourke’s Flameout: Opposition Research Requests Have ‘Died Off’
- Fears rise China could weaponise rare earths in US tech war
- After Huawei, U.S. could blacklist Chinese surveillance tech firm - media
- I'm the same age as Elizabeth Warren. We 70-somethings have no business being president.
- Iran Has Amassed the Largest Ballistic Missile Force in the Middle East
- Farage's Brexit Party to Trounce May, Sporting Index Says
- Hospital that treated baby cut from womb investigated
- American Airlines blames mechanics for 2,200 flight delays, cancellations, warns of summer travel trouble
- Iraq caught in the middle of US-Iran face-off
- U.S. eases curbs on Huawei; founder says clampdown underestimates Chinese firm
- Comrade Sanders Targets Charter Schools
- Secret Service Officers Are Being Sent to the Border
- China Warns About ‘Unwavering Resolve’ to Fight U.S. ‘Bullying’
- Abducted Idaho girl found safe in Arizona, suspect jailed
- The Latest: Private lake dam in Oklahoma City endangered
- Will FAA's plan for 737 MAX fly outside US?
- Russian bombers, fighters intercepted off Alaska: US military
- U.S. judge approves PG&E $105 million wildfire assistance fund
- Carriers Drop Huawei Phones as U.S. Crackdown Crimps Plans
- Trump says he doesn't want war with Iran. Is John Bolton driving the US into a conflict anyway?
- This Is the Secret to Making Your Driveway 10 Times More Beautiful
- North Korea calls Biden 'fool of low IQ' over Kim criticism
- May’s Desperate Gamble on a New Brexit Referendum Falls Flat
- Washington's Huawei reprieve triggers relief rally in bruised EU chip stocks
- Google unveils a fresh new look for Search on mobile devices
- Mississippi governor signs 'heartbeat' abortion ban into law. Here's what you need to know
- Tale of suicidal 'Handmaid' in New York goes viral
- The Perfect Land Rover Discovery Is For Sale With Morris Leslie
- The Latest: Merkel, Macron and Putin discuss Iran situation
- UPDATE 7-U.S. judge says Qualcomm violated antitrust law; appeal planned, shares plunge
- Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez says she'd be 'hard pressed' to back Biden in primary
- 30+ Father’s Day Brunch Recipes, From Oreo Pancakes to Breakfast Burgers
- Minister Quits as May Resists Pressure to Go: Brexit Update
- Tornado touched down in Lancaster County, officials confirm
- British Steel collapses; thousands of jobs could go
- Bigger cuts expected: 23,000 more Ford layoffs needed, analysts say
Bomb-laden drone from Yemen rebels targets Saudi airport Posted: 21 May 2019 11:20 AM PDT DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Yemen's Iranian-allied Houthi rebels attacked a Saudi airport and military base with a bomb-laden drone Tuesday, an assault acknowledged by the kingdom as Middle East tensions remained high between Tehran and Washington. There were no immediate reports of injuries or damage. |
Researchers say a tiny planet slammed into the Moon a long time ago Posted: 21 May 2019 12:11 PM PDT Earth's Moon only ever shows us one face. It's locked into its current orientation, with a permanent nearside and farside, but it wasn't until the Apollo missions that scientists were able to see just how different the two sides really are. The nearside, with its sea of dark gray basins standing in contrast to the brilliant white powder that covers the rest of its face, varies dramatically from the farside, which is marked with countless smaller craters in a more uniform distribution.The debate over how the Moon's split personalities developed has raged for decades, but new research seems to indicate that one of the possible explanations does indeed hold water. The theory, that Earth's Moon was struck by a tiny dwarf planet long ago, is the subject of a new research paper published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets.Using computer models to simulate what may have happened to the Moon's surface long ago, researchers suggest the most likely scenario seems to be the collision between the Moon and a very large body. The impact of a dwarf planet as large as 480 miles across would have struck what we see today as the Moon's nearside at a speed of 14,000 miles per hour.This theory stands in contrast to other proposed explanations, including the theory that Earth may have once had not one Moon, but two. The two-moon theory suggests that Earth's moon duo may have at one point collided and merged, leaving the Moon as we see it today looking oddly unsymmetrical.The dwarf planet collision scenario assumes that whatever the body that struck the Moon was, it was in its own path around the Sun and just happened to be in the right place at the right time to strike Earth's natural satellite. This, the researchers say, would also explain why the crust on the farside of the Moon is different than that of its nearside."We demonstrate that a large body slowly impacting the nearside of the Moon can reproduce the observed crustal thickness asymmetry and form both the farside highlands and the nearside lowlands," the paper explains. "Additionally, the model shows that the resulting impact ejecta would cover the primordial anorthositic crust to form a two‐layer crust on the farside, as observed." |
New Feature on 2020 Chevrolet and GMC Models Won't Let Car Move Till Driver Fastens Seatbelt Posted: 21 May 2019 12:03 PM PDT |
HUD Secretary Ben Carson stumped during congressional hearing Posted: 21 May 2019 12:22 PM PDT |
Don't Just Vacation in Any Old Airbnb When You Can Choose One on Wheels Posted: 21 May 2019 09:25 AM PDT |
Latest Sign of Beto O’Rourke’s Flameout: Opposition Research Requests Have ‘Died Off’ Posted: 21 May 2019 02:03 AM PDT Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast/GettyIn the days leading up to Beto O'Rourke's presidential campaign, a top Republican opposition research firm was brimming with requests from political reporters angling for dirt. America Rising, a political action committee that shared details of its internal inquiries with The Daily Beast, said the asks came from a dozen or more reporters and ranged from broad questions to more tailored points of interest. But 10 weeks after O'Rourke's official launch, those requests are virtually nonexistent."The requests for oppo on him have completely died off," a staffer at the oppo group said.The lack of oppo requests suggests a larger problem looming over O'Rourke's campaign: a visible decline in public interest. Once elevated to the top of Democratic watch-lists, the former congressman is now registering in single digits in several national polls, nosediving from 12 percent in a Quinnipiac poll conducted in March to just 5 percent in the same survey in April. And while he's beginning to roll out new hires in key voting states, some say he's already fallen behind other candidates whose field operations have been interfacing with voters for months. Beto O'Rourke Blew ItAmerica Rising, which has cornered the market on opposition research on the nearly two dozen presidential contenders, has tracked what it considers a steady decline in the public's interest in O'Rourke. The Republican National Committee, known for slinging insults about Democrats into mainstream consciousness, has not received any requests from reporters for O'Rourke information in recent weeks, according to a senior official. Typically, a high level of curiosity in revealing a candidate's political past is one indicator of their perceived viability. And a noticeable downtick in interest could signal an enthusiasm gap between where O'Rourke started and where he's ended up in two months. O'Rourke, himself, seemed to acknowledge the flagging interest in a recent interview with MSNBC's Rachel Maddow. "I recognize I can do a better job also of talking to a national audience," O'Rourke said. "I hope that I'm continuing to do better over time, but we've been extraordinarily fortunate with the campaign that we've run so far." His next big chance will be Tuesday night, when he'll appear in his first CNN town hall at 10 p.m. from Drake University in Des Moines. The network has previously hosted such events for several of his rivals, giving a boost to some lesser-known candidates early into their campaigns. On Monday, O'Rourke told reporters he would participate in a Fox News town hall, a general-election strategy favored by some 2020 hopefuls as an attempt to reach voters beyond the traditional Democratic base. But according to an analysis shared with The Daily Beast by Media Matters, a nonprofit that tracks right-wing coverage, even Fox News' daily mentions of O'Rourke online have visibly declined since he announced his bid, indicating that he may no longer be considered a serious threat as a Democratic contender. O'Rourke's campaign sees it differently: "From my perspective there's been no decline of oppo to respond to," a source within the campaign said. Press requests from print and television outlets, including bookers in charge of getting candidates on the air, have not declined since the launch, the campaign source added. While it's still early to plot ad buys—the Iowa caucuses are nine months away—a source who tracks ad information for multiple political campaigns says that O'Rourke's failure to get into that world early coincides with a frenzied campaign that's no longer top-of-mind for voters. "It fits with an overall theme of his campaign being a little disorganized," the source who analyzes political ads said. "He had such a moment in 2018 but it seems to have fizzled out."While no pollsters or ad makers have been hired, a source within O'Rourke's campaign first told The Daily Beast that they have been in initial discussions with various polling, data, and analytics firms, as well as outfits who do campaign ads. Bringing on a pollster had not previously been a top priority, the source said, adding that the campaign has been focused on talking to voters in 154 town halls and traveling to 116 cities.O'Rourke has made recent inroads on the political staffing front, bringing on Jen O'Malley Dillon, Jeff Berman, and Rob Flaherty, top talent from Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama's campaigns, among other recent national and state hires. But he has missed out on other high-level talent who wandered to other campaigns, multiple sources said.Meanwhile, other presidential campaigns have already hired staffers who previously worked with or expressed interest in O'Rourke. Shelby Cole, a top O'Rourke aide who helped him raise an eye-popping $80 million during his Senate campaign, joined California Sen. Kamala Harris' team as its digital fundraising director. Emmy Ruiz, who served as Clinton's state director in Nevada and Colorado in 2016, was thought to be seriously weighing joining O'Rourke before he announced, according to multiple Democratic sources unaffiliated with current campaigns. She later joined Harris as a senior adviser. One top Democratic operative admitted to eyeing O'Rourke for months, but changed candidate loyalty after reading his announcement article in Vanity Fair. "I was definitely interested in him back in January and February," the veteran operative said, who has since joined another presidential campaign in a top position. "The Vanity Fair story fed a fear I had, which was that he was a little too fly-by-the-seat-of-his-pants," the veteran operative said. "I just felt that he hadn't totally thought this through. So that kind of soured me on him."—Asawin Suebsaeng contributed reporting for this article.Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Fears rise China could weaponise rare earths in US tech war Posted: 22 May 2019 03:53 AM PDT The US has hit China where it hurts by going after its telecom champion Huawei, but Beijing's control of the global supply of rare earths used in smartphones and electric cars gives it a powerful weapon in their escalating tech war. A seemingly routine visit by President Xi Jinping to a Chinese rare earths company this week is being widely read as an obvious threat that Beijing is standing ready for action. Xi's inspection tour "is no accident, this didn't happen by chance," said Li Mingjiang, China programme coordinator at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS) in Singapore. |
After Huawei, U.S. could blacklist Chinese surveillance tech firm - media Posted: 22 May 2019 08:45 AM PDT The U.S. administration is considering Huawei-like sanctions on Chinese video surveillance firm Hikvision, media reports show, deepening worries that trade friction between the world's top two economies could be further inflamed. The restrictions would limit Hikvision's ability to buy U.S. technology and American companies may have to obtain government approval to supply components to the Chinese firm, the New York Times reported https://nyti.ms/2MfgBS3 on Tuesday. The United States stuck Huawei Technologies on a trade blacklist last week, effectively banning U.S. firms from doing business with the world's largest telecom network gear maker, in a major escalation in the trade war. |
I'm the same age as Elizabeth Warren. We 70-somethings have no business being president. Posted: 21 May 2019 11:57 AM PDT |
Iran Has Amassed the Largest Ballistic Missile Force in the Middle East Posted: 22 May 2019 03:13 AM PDT Deterring regional adversaries from threatening Iran is the primary reason Tehran has amassed the largest ballistic missile force in the Middle East.The missile program actually began under the Shah, but it was accelerated during the Iran-Iraq War in order to threaten Saddam Hussein with strikes deep in Iraqi territory. Since then, Iran has worked with countries like Libya, North Korea and China in order to develop a large and diverse arsenal of ballistic and cruise missiles that form one part of its three-leg deterrent strategy. With Iran now using missiles in conflict, it's worth taking a closer look at the weapons in its arsenal.(This first appeared back in 2017.)Shahab-SeriesThe backbone of Iran's missile forces are the Shahab-series of liquid-fueled (mostly) short-range ballistic missiles (SRBM). There are three variants of the missile: The Shahab-1, Shahab-2 and Shahab-3. The Shahab-1 was the first missile Iran acquired and is based on the Soviet Scud-B missile. Iran reportedly purchased these initially from Libya and possibly Syria, but North Korea has been its main supplier. The Shab-1 has a reported range between 285–330 kilometers, and can carry a warhead of around one thousand kilograms. Iran is believed to have three hundred Shahab-1 rockets. |
Farage's Brexit Party to Trounce May, Sporting Index Says Posted: 21 May 2019 09:03 AM PDT Prime Minister Theresa May's Conservatives will win seven, while Labour will take 13 and the Liberal Democrats 12, Sporting Index predicted in an email in London on Tuesday. Sporting Index has had a consistently strong record in predicting some of the key twists and turns of the Brexit saga. Last month, about two hours before the latest vote on May's Brexit deal, the spread betting firm forecast she'd lose by 60 votes. |
Hospital that treated baby cut from womb investigated Posted: 21 May 2019 03:02 PM PDT CHICAGO (AP) — The agency that licenses and inspects health care facilities in Illinois has started an investigation of a suburban Chicago hospital where doctors treated a baby brought in by a woman claiming to be his mother, a spokeswoman for the agency said Tuesday. The woman was charged weeks later with killing the actual mother and cutting the child from her womb. |
Posted: 21 May 2019 11:39 AM PDT |
Iraq caught in the middle of US-Iran face-off Posted: 21 May 2019 10:02 AM PDT Scarred by two decades of conflict, Iraq finds itself caught in the middle of a US-Iranian tug-of-war, fearing it could pay the price of any confrontation between its two main allies. Analysts say third parties may seek to exploit the latest spike in tensions between Tehran and Washington to spark a showdown that serves their own interests. Iraq "pays a disproportionate tax on Iranian-American tensions and (has) an unenviable front-line position in any future conflict between the two," said Fanar Haddad, an Iraq expert at the National University of Singapore. |
U.S. eases curbs on Huawei; founder says clampdown underestimates Chinese firm Posted: 21 May 2019 03:49 PM PDT The U.S. Commerce Department blocked Huawei Technologies Co Ltd from buying U.S. goods last week, a major escalation in the trade war between the world's two top economies, saying the firm was involved in activities contrary to national security. The two countries increased import tariffs on each other's goods over the past two weeks after U.S. President Donald Trump said China had reneged on earlier commitments made during months of negotiations. On Monday, the Commerce Department granted Huawei a license to buy U.S. goods until Aug. 19 to maintain existing telecoms networks and provide software updates to Huawei smartphones, a move intended to give telecom operators that rely on Huawei time to make other arrangements. |
Comrade Sanders Targets Charter Schools Posted: 21 May 2019 03:30 AM PDT Few things offend Bernie Sanders as much as people escaping from command-and-control government systems, even minority students whose parents are desperate to get their kids a decent education.The socialist wants to turn George Wallace on his head and not block black children from attending traditional public schools, but block them from exiting those schools for something better. The New York Times wrote a long, devastating report the other day on the then-Burlington, Vt., mayor's love affair with the Sandinistas in the 1980s. So many decades later, his reflex is the same: If the Sandinistas wouldn't favor it, he's not inclined to like it much either. That goes for charter schools that, yes, are publicly funded, but still too flexible and unregulated for refined socialist tastes. Over the weekend, Sanders unveiled his education plan. He wants to end for-profit charter schools (about 15 percent of all charters) and impose a moratorium on new public funding of charters, while taking steps to impose a one-size-fits-all regulatory regime on existing charters.Sanders thus seeks to kneecap what has been an astonishingly successful experiment in urban education because it doesn't fit nicely within his ideological preconceptions.That Sanders says he wants to do this to advance the principle that "every human being has the fundamental right to a good education" is hilariously perverse. The comrades will have a good chuckle over that one.Charter schools aren't the product of a libertarian conspiracy. They fall short of the vouchers favored by conservatives to allow parents to get access to private schools. Charters receive public money but have more leeway to develop policies outside the regulatory and union straitjacket of traditional public schools. Charters had bipartisan support before a Vermont socialist became one of the party's thought leaders. Bill Clinton won the first-ever lifetime achievement award from the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools. Promoting charters was a hallmark of Barack Obama's education agenda and a signature of Cory Booker's mayoralty in Newark, N.J.Not all charters are created equal. Some don't serve their students well, especially online charter schools, and the performance of suburban and rural charter schools hasn't been very impressive. It's the charter schools in urban areas with the worst traditional public schools that have excelled. According to a well-regarded 2015 study by Stanford's Center for Research on Education Outcomes, students in urban charter schools got the equivalent of 40 additional days of math instruction and 28 additional days of reading annually. The numbers for African-American students in poverty were even better. Charters in Newark and Boston have seen enormous academic gains.In New York City, the Success Academy founded by Eva Moskowitz — one of the foremost education reformers of our time — has eliminated racial and economic achievement gaps.It's amazing what schools can do when they impose discipline, have the highest expectations, and focus with a laser intensity on instruction. Anyone interested in the education of minority students should seek to build on these oases of excellence, rather than cut them off. But the teachers unions hate charters, and they are a much more powerful potential cadre in the Sanders "revolution" than poor black kids. Sanders suggests that charter schools somehow increase segregation. This is nonsense, as Jonathan Chait of New York Magazine points out. Urban charter schools reflect the segregation of their neighborhoods where they are located — just like traditional public schools do.The polling shows that minority parents get what Sanders (and white progressives) refuses to understand. A solid majority of black and Hispanic Democrats have a favorable view of charters, while white Democrats have an unfavorable view by a 2-1 margin. It is doubtful how much of his anti-charter agenda Sanders would be able to enact if elected, since much of the action is at the state and local level. That he's hostile to these schools should, regardless, redound to his shame. © 2019 by King Features Syndicate |
Secret Service Officers Are Being Sent to the Border Posted: 20 May 2019 06:10 PM PDT Jose Luiz Gonzalez/ReutersThe U.S. Secret Service is now participating in a not-so-secret undertaking: dealing with the influx of migrants at America's southern border. According to a communication from the Department of Homeland Security's headquarters reviewed by The Daily Beast, the small law enforcement agency has sent personnel to the border already and is looking to send more in the coming weeks. The move came in response to a directive then-DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen sent out earlier this spring asking each component of the department to find volunteers and dispatch them to the border. Even though it's most closely associated with the White House, the Secret Service—along with a host of other entities and agencies—is a component of DHS. And as a result, it's shipping people south. A DHS spokesperson did not dispute this reporting. "As we have consistently said, the Department is considering all options to address the humanitarian and security crisis at our southern border," said the spokesperson. "We will continue to work with our workforce to find dynamic solutions and funding to address this very serious problem. As part of this effort, it is our responsibility to explore fiscal mechanisms that will ensure the safety and welfare of both our workforce and the migrant population, which is also reflected in the supplemental request submitted to Congress."The Daily Beast reported last week that the arm of DHS that handles threats to America's cybersecurity and critical infrastructure, called the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, has struggled to find enough volunteers to head to the border and fulfill DHS headquarters' request. The agency works to secure election systems, schools, and places of worship—all of which face acute threats. Besides protecting the president, the first family, and other prominent government figures, the Secret Service also conducts criminal investigations. Its focuses include financial crimes and cybersecurity threats. The diversion of law enforcement and national security personnel to the border has concerned some congressional Democrats, who say it may be a misuse of limited government resources. But pushing back against the dramatic increase in people trying to enter the U.S. through the southern border has become has become a singular priority of President Trump. In both March and April, law enforcement officials apprehended more than 100,000 people trying to enter the U.S., according to DHS statistics. During the Obama administration, the agency was beset by scandal: Washington socialites slipped past agents and crashed the president's first state dinner; a Secret Service agent told his counterparts to stand down after a man fired a gun at the White House, thinking the sound came from a car backfiring; an agent who traveled to Amsterdam with the president to protect him got drunk and passed out in a hallway; and more, as NBC News has detailed. Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
China Warns About ‘Unwavering Resolve’ to Fight U.S. ‘Bullying’ Posted: 20 May 2019 11:49 PM PDT Trump upped the ante in his trade dispute with China last week, announcing moves to curb Huawei's business that are starting to have ramifications for other companies around the world. "This is wrong behavior, so there will be a necessary response," Zhang Ming, China's envoy to the EU, said in an interview in Brussels on Monday. |
Abducted Idaho girl found safe in Arizona, suspect jailed Posted: 21 May 2019 04:35 PM PDT |
The Latest: Private lake dam in Oklahoma City endangered Posted: 22 May 2019 04:44 PM PDT |
Will FAA's plan for 737 MAX fly outside US? Posted: 22 May 2019 02:29 AM PDT Getting Boeing's top-selling 737 MAX back in the skies faces a critical test this week as the company and US regulators each seek to restore their reputations after two deadly crashes. The US Federal Aviation Administration convened a summit of global aviation regulators on Thursday to walk through the steps taken to address concerns with the MAX following criticism the agency dragged its feet on the decision to ground the jets. Most agencies around the world have said little or nothing about the situation since the 737 MAX was grounded following the March 10 Ethiopian Airlines crash, which together with a Lion Air crash in October, claimed 346 lives. |
Russian bombers, fighters intercepted off Alaska: US military Posted: 21 May 2019 11:37 AM PDT US fighters intercepted six Russian military aircraft in international airspace west of Alaska, and shadowed them until they exited the area, the North American Air Defense Command said Tuesday. The Russian aircraft included two Tu-95 strategic bombers, which were intercepted Monday by two F-22 fighters, the command said. A second group of two Tu-95 bombers and two Su-35 fighters were also intercepted by a pair of F-22 fighters, it said. |
U.S. judge approves PG&E $105 million wildfire assistance fund Posted: 22 May 2019 11:23 AM PDT PG&E Corp may set up a $105 million housing fund for victims of 2017 and 2018 wildfires in California, which set records for devastation and were blamed on the utility's equipment, the judge overseeing the investor-owned power producer's bankruptcy ruled on Wednesday. Creditors, which include wildfire victims, are fighting for funds as PG&E navigates bankruptcy stemming from the blazes and as the state plans for increasingly long and dangerous fire seasons its officials attribute to climate change. U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Dennis Montali at a hearing approved a motion by PG&E seeking permission to establish the fund for people who lost homes in the fires and were uninsured or have used up or will exhaust their insurance. |
Carriers Drop Huawei Phones as U.S. Crackdown Crimps Plans Posted: 22 May 2019 08:52 AM PDT President Donald Trump's move last week to put Huawei on an export blacklist amid a trade war with Beijing threatens to cut the tech company off from U.S. software and component suppliers. Telecom operators fear that could affect the functioning of its newest handsets as Huawei won't get access to the most popular version of the Android mobile operating system developed by Alphabet Inc.'s Google. Britain's BT Group Plc decided not to include Huawei phones in Britain's first 5G network because of uncertainty over whether they could use Android, a spokesman for the carrier said. |
Trump says he doesn't want war with Iran. Is John Bolton driving the US into a conflict anyway? Posted: 21 May 2019 11:52 AM PDT |
This Is the Secret to Making Your Driveway 10 Times More Beautiful Posted: 22 May 2019 08:24 AM PDT |
North Korea calls Biden 'fool of low IQ' over Kim criticism Posted: 22 May 2019 03:09 AM PDT |
May’s Desperate Gamble on a New Brexit Referendum Falls Flat Posted: 22 May 2019 12:19 AM PDT Theresa May made a desperate final gamble to get her Brexit deal through the British Parliament before she's thrown out of office -- but her efforts looked doomed. In a hastily arranged speech on Tuesday, the embattled prime minister promised to give members of Parliament a vote on whether to call another referendum to ratify Britain's divorce from the European Union. It's something many MPs -- including scores in the opposition Labour Party -- have been calling for, but she made it conditional on them backing her deal first. |
Washington's Huawei reprieve triggers relief rally in bruised EU chip stocks Posted: 21 May 2019 12:47 AM PDT Shares in European semiconductor companies, one of the most sensitive sectors to the global trade tensions, recovered from their worst day in 4-1/2 months on Tuesday after the White House backtracked overnight on tough limits on China's Huawei. AMS, STMicroelectronics and Germany's Infineon shot higher - between 2-5.6% - in early deals after Washington temporarily eased trade limits on China's Huawei Technologies, in a move aimed at minimizing disruption for its customers. The technology index was up 1% at 0741 GMT, recovering some of the 2.8% lost on Monday as investors shunned the sector amid worries that Huawei suppliers would lose business or have to sever ties with the world's No. 2 smartphone company due to tough U.S. restrictions imposed last week. |
Google unveils a fresh new look for Search on mobile devices Posted: 22 May 2019 05:03 PM PDT Google unveiled a new look and feel today for the way it presents Google Search results on mobile, and the update has been regarded in a few corners now as somewhat News Feed-like.It's easy to see why that's the case, as the search giant's changes include putting emphasis on a website name and favicon above the search results. Whereas the source of results had previously not been so clearly emphasized, which makes the new design for showing results feel a little like scrolling through a feed of posts from publishers and the like."With this new design, a website's branding can be front and center, helping you better understand where the information is coming from and what pages have what you're looking for," explains Google Senior Interaction Designer for Search Jamie Leach in a company blog post today. "The name of the website and its icon appear at the top of the results card to help anchor each result, so you can more easily scan the page of results and decide what to explore next."The post notes that the refreshed look for what's arguably Google's most important product will start showing up to users over the coming days. As part of the changes, Leach continues, when you search for a product or service and Google feels like it's got a relevant, "useful" ad that would be worth including in the results, you'll now see an ad label in bold at the top of a search results card. The web address will also be included, so you can quickly determine where the information you're seeing is coming from.The other important thing to note about the Google Search refresh on mobile is that this also lays the foundation for Google to add more action buttons and information previews to search results cards, with Google wanting you to be able to now do everything from buying movie tickets to playing podcasts right there from within the results. "Our goal with Search always has been to help people quickly and easily find the information that they're looking for," Leach says. "Over the years, the amount and format of information available on the web has changed drastically -- from the proliferation of images and video to the availability of 3D objects you can now view in AR." Which is why the company thought a "visual refresh" of Search on mobile would do a better job of helping people find the information they need and quickly determine where it came from. |
Posted: 21 May 2019 11:45 AM PDT |
Tale of suicidal 'Handmaid' in New York goes viral Posted: 22 May 2019 11:48 AM PDT A red-cloaked "Handmaid" ready to hurl herself off a Manhattan building, possibly unhinged by recent legislative assaults on the right to abortion? For months now, amid the #MeToo movement and challenges to the right to abortion in the United States and elsewhere, demonstrations by women dressed in costumes inspired by "The Handmaid's Tale" have multiplied. The hit television series based on Margaret Atwood's 1985 novel evokes a world in which the United States has become a religious dictatorship where fertile women are enslaved and their rape is institutionalized. |
The Perfect Land Rover Discovery Is For Sale With Morris Leslie Posted: 22 May 2019 05:30 AM PDT Land Rover's second-generation Discovery is largely ignored by those seeking a classic 4x4. The first-generation Land Rover Discovery broke new ground when it first hit tarmac in 1989. Some bemoaned that Land Rover's fresh addition to their showroom lacked the vagabond nobility and charisma of its plush brethren, yet they missed the point. |
The Latest: Merkel, Macron and Putin discuss Iran situation Posted: 21 May 2019 12:44 PM PDT |
UPDATE 7-U.S. judge says Qualcomm violated antitrust law; appeal planned, shares plunge Posted: 22 May 2019 03:40 AM PDT Qualcomm Inc illegally suppressed competition in the market for smartphone chips by threatening to cut off supplies and extracting excessive licensing fees, a U.S. judge ruled, a decision that could force the company to overhaul its business practices. The decision issued late Tuesday night by U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose, California, caused Qualcomm shares to plunge 11 percent on Wednesday. "Qualcomm's licensing practices have strangled competition" in parts of the chip market for years, harming rivals, smartphone makers, and consumers, Koh wrote in a 233-page decision. |
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez says she'd be 'hard pressed' to back Biden in primary Posted: 21 May 2019 05:35 PM PDT Bernie Sanders appears to be the favorite to secure Ocasio-Cortez's prized endorsement in the Democratic presidential primaryCongresswoman Alexandria Ocasio Cortez told the Guardian: 'I'm not close to an endorsement announcement any time soon.' Photograph: Joshua Roberts/ReutersAlexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the progressive US congresswoman and social media sensation, has said she would be "hard pressed" to endorse the frontrunner, Joe Biden, in the Democratic presidential primary.The statement is the latest sign of the left's apathy towards the former vice-president, who has surged ahead of the Senator Bernie Sanders and other rivals in recent polls.Sanders, a self-declared democratic socialist, appears to be the favourite to secure 29-year-old Ocasio-Cortez's prized endorsement but she said she was still some way off making a decision."I'm not close to an endorsement announcement any time soon," she told the Guardian on Tuesday. "I'm still trying to get a handle on my job. It seems like ages but I'm just five months in and we have quite some time. The debates are in the summer and our first primary election for the entire country isn't until next year." Asked if she would consider endorsing Biden, widely seen as a centrist, Ocasio-Cortez replied: "I'd be hard pressed to see that happen, to be honest, in a primary."Biden, comfortably leading every opinion poll, came under fire last week when Reuters reported he was pursuing a "middle ground" approach to the climate crisis. He later distanced himself from the implication.Ocasio-Cortez criticised politicians seeking "a middle-of-the-road approach to save our lives". Sanders, running second in most polls, tweeted that there was "no 'middle ground' when it comes to climate policy".If and when Ocasio-Cortez does endorse a candidate, Sanders probably remains the favourite to secure her support. She was an organiser for his 2016 primary campaign against Hillary Clinton. The pair appeared at a rally in Washington last week to support the Green New Deal climate plan.In a short interview on Tuesday the congresswoman, who has more than 4 million Twitter followers, also reiterated her demand for Donald Trump's impeachment. "I think that the grounds have been there for quite some time but the case is really getting to a larger point that we haven't seen before," she said.Democratic leaders are putting the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, under pressure to move ahead with the process. Ocasio-Cortez added: "I know that the conversation is really changing this week in the caucus and so we'll see where the speaker lands." |
30+ Father’s Day Brunch Recipes, From Oreo Pancakes to Breakfast Burgers Posted: 21 May 2019 02:40 PM PDT |
Minister Quits as May Resists Pressure to Go: Brexit Update Posted: 22 May 2019 11:45 AM PDT Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 committee of rank-and-file Conservative MPs, confirmed he will meet with Prime Minister Theresa May on Friday, adding that he will follow that with a meeting of his committee's executive. Speaking to reporters in Parliament, Brady declined to comment on the question of changing party rules to allow an earlier leadership challenge against May. |
Tornado touched down in Lancaster County, officials confirm Posted: 20 May 2019 05:48 PM PDT |
British Steel collapses; thousands of jobs could go Posted: 22 May 2019 06:56 AM PDT British Steel collapsed on Wednesday after the government said last-ditch talks with its owners failed to secure a full financial rescue. The High Court in London ordered British Steel Limited into compulsory liquidation, a statement said. "British Steel Limited was wound-up in the High Court" on Wednesday, meaning its assets would be sold to help pay debts. |
Bigger cuts expected: 23,000 more Ford layoffs needed, analysts say Posted: 22 May 2019 08:14 AM PDT |
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